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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A three-year old male cynomolgus macaque (Macaca fascicularis) presented with clinical signs of anorexia and
depression
that decreased over a 48-hour period. Results of abdominal radiography abdominocentesis, blood biochemical analysis and CBC suggested septic peritonitis. Exploratory laparotomy revealed multiple perforations along the mesenteric border of the small intestine. Necropsy revealed masses of fibrous material in the stomach and cecum. Multiple mucosal ulcerations, as well as linear fibrous material, were found in the small intestine. The ulceration, perforations, and septic peritonitis were attributed to the ingestion of rope that had been attached to the animal's
cage
as an environmental-enrichment device.
...
PMID:Environmental enrichment-related injury in a macaque (Macaca fascicularis): intestinal linear foreign body. 1109 42
The Hartshill Horseshoe
cage
is a titanium implant that is inserted after removal of the disc in anterior lumbar interbody fusion. The authors use corticocancellous iliac crest graft, which is contained within the confines of the implant. The
cage
and the motion segment are stabilized by inserting screws into the adjacent vertebral bodies through holes in the implant. Between 1995 and 1997, 27 patients had this implant inserted. Minimum follow-up was 2.1 years (mean: 2.9 years). Patients were assessed using the Oswestry disability index, a core set of six questions, a pain drawing, and psychometrically using the Zung
Depression
Scale and the Modified Somatic Perception Questionnaire. The patients' subjective assessment was also obtained. Twenty-one patients (77.8%) improved significantly on the Oswestry disability index and 22 patients (81.5%) improved by subjective assessment using the "core set" of six questions. There was no evidence of pseudarthrosis, loosening, or osteolysis around the implant or the screws. The
cage
prevents graft extrusion, collapse, or sinkage through the endplates. The normal lumbar lordosis is restored and, by restoring normal intervertebral disc space height, the Horseshoe opens up the neural foraminae. This
cage
stabilizes the motion segments and secures the graft, preventing micromotion at the graft vertebral body interface and providing a conducive environment for fusion.
...
PMID:Containment and stabilization of bone graft in anterior lumbar interbody fusion: the role of the Hartshill Horseshoe cage. 1128 21
The present study examines gender-related issues in the development of animal models of
depression
and anxiety disorders. Three main issues are discussed: (1) gender differences in the prevalence, etiology, and responses to treatments of neuropsychiatric disorders. An extensive literature reports that mood disorders are more frequent in women compared with men but the great majority of basic research has focused on male rodents as animal models; (2) sex-differences in behavior reflect both organizational and activational effects of steroid hormones, and should be considered in the conceptual frame of the evolutionary theory of sexual selection; (3) animal models of anxiety and
depression
. Social stress appears to be a good model to induce anxiety-like and
depression
-like responses, but a large discrepancy in the possibility of inducing social stress in the two genders exists. Reliable models of social stress in females are needed. The effects of social context, as a possible source of stress, on exploration and anxiety in male and female mice were investigated by taking into account the natural history and social behavior of this species. Mice housed individually for 7 days or with siblings were tested in a free-exploratory paradigm of anxiety (where test animals have a choice to stay in their home
cage
or to explore an open field). Individually housed females showed lower propensity for exploration and a higher level of anxiety compared with group-housed females. Individually housed males tended to show an opposite profile. Animal models may contribute to elucidating some aspect of neuropsychiatric disorders, but they require consideration of the natural life of the animal species studied and of their social behavior in an evolutionary perspective.
...
PMID:Animal models of anxiety and depression: how are females different? 1137 78
Our objective in this study was to review the characteristics, symptom intensity and satisfaction of patients referred to a half-day symptom control clinic (SCC) for advanced cancer patients. This was a retrospective study. The setting was a multidisciplinary symptom control clinic in a cancer centre. Those taking part were 166 consecutive advanced cancer patients referred to the half-day multidisciplinary SCC because of symptom distress. Patients referred to the clinic were assessed in a private room by a physician, a nurse, a pharmacist, a psychologist, and social, rehabilitation, nutrition, respiratory and pastoral care workers. Symptom distress (multiple visual analogue scales), cognition, and
CAGE
(alcoholism) were determined. Recommendations were given to the patient and sent to the oncologist, family physician and home care nurse. For 110 patients a second assessment was carried out 1 week later, and 64 patients underwent a telephone assessment 2 weeks after the second visit. Symptom intensity was determined during initial and follow-up visits, as well as during two follow-up telephone assessments. In addition, demographics and patient satisfaction with the SCC were determined. Overall symptom distress,
depression
, anxiety and sensation of wellbeing improved significantly from the first (n = 166) to the second clinic visit (n = 110). Further significant improvement was observed in overall symptom distress, pain, anxiety, sense of wellbeing and
depression
at the 2- (n = 64) and 4-week (n = 38) telephone follow-up assessments. Mean satisfaction with the SCC (0-10) was 7.7 +/- 2. Our findings suggest that the work of the SCC results in long-term effectiveness in symptom control and high levels of patient satisfaction. The SCC allows for better integration of care between a cancer center and community-based physicians and nurses. It also allows patients access to multiple disciplines that are not available outside tertiary centers.
...
PMID:Multidisciplinary symptom control clinic in a cancer center: a retrospective study. 1140 Nov
Systemically administered cholinomimetics or cholinesterase inhibitors can depress behavior in humans and animals, whereas antimuscarinic agents reverse this effect or even produce euphoria. Although these effects have been well documented, the specific brain regions that mediate them remain largely unknown. In the present experiments, muscarinic agonists and antagonists were locally injected into the nucleus accumbens of female Sprague-Dawley rats to test for their effects on behavioral
depression
in the Porsolt swim test and locomotor activity. Local, microinjections of the drugs in the accumbens elicited behaviors that were similar to the systemic effects reported in other studies. Injection of the non-specific agonist arecoline (40 and 80 microg) dose-dependently inhibited swimming and escape behavior. This may be mediated in part by accumbens M1 receptors because blocking these receptors with the specific antagonist pirenzepine (17.5 and 35.0 microg) did the opposite by increasing swimming. Gallamine (0.13, 0.44, and 0.88 microg), an antagonist at M2 receptors, dose-dependently decreased swimming. Two-way microdialysis suggested that this was in part due to the release of ACh by blocking M2 autoreceptors. Scopolamine, a mixed M1/M2 receptor antagonist, also released ACh but did not decrease swimming, probably because the M1 receptors were blocked; the drug (1.0 microg) increased swimming time, much like pirenzepine. With the exception of arecoline, none of the drugs significantly affected locomotor activity in a photocell
cage
. Arecoline (40 microg), which had decreased swimming, reduced activity. The present study suggests that muscarinic receptors in the nucleus accumbens can control immobility in the Porsolt swim test. The onset of immobility may depend on the activation of post-synaptic M1 receptors.
...
PMID:Nucleus accumbens muscarinic receptors in the control of behavioral depression: antidepressant-like effects of local M1 antagonist in the Porsolt swim test. 1144 Aug 10
The current study addressed whether physical activity can buffer stress-induced "behavioral depression" and immunosuppression. Adult, male Sprague-Dawley rats were housed with either a mobile (physically active) or immobile (sedentary) running wheel and exposed to either stress (inescapable tail shock) or no stress (home
cage
control). Voluntary wheel running began 4 wk before stressor exposure. Immediately before stress, all rats were administered an intraperitoneal injection of keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH; 200 microg), and anti-KLH Ig was measured weekly for 4 wk using ELISA. Prior physical activity reduced the stress-induced behavioral
depression
and prevented the stress-induced suppression of anti-KLH IgM and IgG(2a) antibodies. Anti-KLH IgG(1) was stress insensitive. These data suggest that physical activity can buffer the negative impact of stress on behavior and acquired immune function.
...
PMID:Voluntary physical activity prevents stress-induced behavioral depression and anti-KLH antibody suppression. 1144 51
Previous research indicates that the serotonergic neurons of the caudal dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) are activated to a greater degree by inescapable shock (IS) as compared to escapable shock (ES), causing a greater release of serotonin (5-HT) in the DRN and in target regions. This differential activation is necessary for the behavioral changes that occur after exposure to IS, but not to ES (i.e. learned helplessness/behavioral
depression
). Although the critical role of the DRN in learned helplessness is clear, the neural inputs to the caudal DRN which result in this selective activation are unknown. One structure that may be involved in the activation of the DRN and the induction of learned helplessness/behavioral
depression
is the habenular complex. In experiment 1, habenula lesions eliminated the differential rise in DRN extracellular 5-HT levels in response to IS and ES exposure by severely attenuating the rise in 5-HT for both groups. In experiment 2, sham operated and habenula lesioned rats were exposed to either ES, IS or no stress (home
cage
control; HCC). Twenty-four hours later, sham rats previously exposed to IS exhibited longer escape latencies as compared to both ES and HCC rats (i.e. learned helplessness). The habenular lesion eliminated the differences in escape latency between groups, thus eliminating the induction of learned helplessness/behavioral
depression
. These results suggest that the habenula is necessary for the differential activation of the DRN and the escape deficits produced by IS.
...
PMID:The role of the habenular complex in the elevation of dorsal raphe nucleus serotonin and the changes in the behavioral responses produced by uncontrollable stress. 1160 36
The aim of this project was to approach subjects who committed parasuicide but did not primarily receive or accept a recommendation for care through the regular routines after referral to a general hospital. Three hundred and twenty-nine consecutive parasuicides in 10- to 89-year-olds (162 men and 167 women) were studied. One hundred were subsequently hospitalized in the departments of psychiatry, 130 were followed up at outpatient facilities, and 96 left without any follow-up. A psychiatric liaison consultation was made in 57% of the total sample. The 96 subjects without follow-up were compared with the subjects who received follow-up. The sample was somewhat younger and included slightly more men. They were single in 54% and unemployed in 43% of the cases. According to the DSM-IV, 27% had a concurrent
depression
. According to the
CAGE
questions, 57% had indication of substance addiction. Fifty-four per cent had currently low global functioning, less than 50 points on the GAF. They had not been in contact with psychiatric care previously to the same extent as the others. About 34% of these who did not receive or rejected follow-up initially after a second approach agreed to follow-up when contacted by the project team, referring them to appropriate authorities such as social welfare offices, family counselling, or psychosocial staff within psychiatry or primary care. This may imply that the group delineated is at risk for eventual suicide and that the acceptance of follow-up should be interpreted as an indication that a substantial number needs help and can be successfully encountered by means of a case manager approach.
...
PMID:Parasuicides without follow-up. 1183 22
Histamine H(3) receptor antagonists have been proposed as potentially useful therapeutic agents for the treatment of several disorders including attention deficit, schizophrenia,
depression
, and Alzheimer's disease. We have developed a repeated acquisition version of an inhibitory avoidance task using spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) pups that we believe provides a reproducible measure of the cognitive and attention deficits often characteristic of these disease states, and evaluated two H(3) receptor antagonists. Male SHR, Wistar (WI) and Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rat pups (20--24 days old) were trained to avoid a mild footshock (0.1 mA, 1 s duration), delivered when the pup had transferred from a brightly lit to a darkened compartment. After the first trial, the pup was removed and returned to its home
cage
. One minute later, the same pup was replaced in the brightly-lit compartment and the training process repeated. A total of five trials were recorded. SHR pups performed significantly more poorly than WI or WKY pups using this training schedule, and SHR pups were used for all subsequent studies. Methylphenidate and ABT-418, both clinically active in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), were tested to validate the model. Methylphenidate (1 and 3 mg/kg s.c.) and ABT-418 (0.03 mg/kg s.c.) significantly improved SHR pup performance. The H(3) receptor antagonists GT-2331 (1 mg/kg s.c.) and ciproxifan (3 mg/kg s.c.), also significantly, and in a dose-related manner, enhanced performance of the SHR pups. (R)-alpha-methylhistamine (3 mg/kg s.c.) blocked the pro-cognitive effects of ciproxifan, suggesting an H(3) receptor site of action for this compound. This model is useful for evaluating the cognition/attention-enhancing potential of H(3) receptor antagonists.
...
PMID:Effects of histamine H(3) receptor ligands GT-2331 and ciproxifan in a repeated acquisition avoidance response in the spontaneously hypertensive rat pup. 1184 82
The tryptophan (TRP) depletion method has been used as a tool to investigate the effects of acute lowered serotonin levels in the brain. In the present study, the effects of this treatment were investigated in rat models of anxiety (open field test, home
cage
emergence test),
depression
(forced swimming test, sucrose preference test) and cognition (spatial discrimination learning, sustained attention). It was found that the repeated TRP depletion increased anxiety-related behaviour in the open field test and increased immobility in the forced swimming test. The other behavioural tests did not reveal effects of treatment. TRP levels were decreased in plasma (34%) and hippocampus (33%) but not in the cortex. Stress-induced corticosterone levels were not affected after TRP depletion. The present findings indicate that repeated moderate TRP depletion leads to anxiogenic and depressive-like behaviour in the rat and corroborates the notion of the involvement of serotonin in these behaviours.
...
PMID:Anxiogenic and depressive-like effects, but no cognitive deficits, after repeated moderate tryptophan depletion in the rat. 1194 70
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